In this day and age of the transfer portal and all, it can be a long road between a commitment and a signature.
For Miikka Muurinen and Arkansas, that road stretched across two continents, a Serbian league, a national team appearance and more than a year of waiting.
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On Tuesday afternoon, it finally ended in Fayetteville.
The 7-foot, 223-pound Finnish forward put his name on the dotted line and the Razorbacks made it official on their social media accounts Tuesday morning.
He’d committed to the program back on April 27, but the signing closes the book on one of the more winding recruiting stories in recent college basketball memory.
Path That Went Through Europe
Muurinen didn’t take a typical road to Fayetteville.
After playing at Sunrise Christian Academy in Bel Aire, Kansas and later at Arizona Compass Prep, he headed overseas rather than committing straight out of high school.
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He spent time with Partizan Belgrade in the EuroLeague and ABA League, playing in 14 total games, 8 in ABA play and 6 in EuroLeague action, before leaving the program in late February 2026 to pursue college basketball.
His numbers with Partizan were modest. He averaged 4.1 points and 2.9 rebounds per game at the professional level, seeing limited minutes as a teenager competing against grown men.
That kind of experience isn’t particularly easy and it doesn’t always show up in a stat line.
What it did show up in was the 2026 Nike Hoop Summit.
Muurinen arrived with added weight and noticeably sharper skills, scoring 10 points and grabbing eight rebounds while drawing attention from scouts who hadn’t seen him play in months. He was the conversation of the event.
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His decision to leave Partizan wasn’t a surprise to those who’d followed his recruitment.
According to reporting, the goal all along was to return and play college basketball. He wasn’t walking away from pro ball, he was always planning to come back to the college game.
Family Ties to State of Arkansas
There’s another layer to this story that makes it feel a little more like destiny than coincidence.
Muurinen’s father, Kimmo, played basketball at Little Rock, giving the family genuine Arkansas roots. His mother, Jenni, played at North Carolina, so basketball runs deep on both sides.
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He also took an official visit to Fayetteville back in September 2024, well before his commitment, suggesting the connection to the Razorbacks program was built over time rather than rushed.
Muurinen’s final list before committing included Duke, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, North Carolina and NC State alongside the Hogs. BYU and Illinois were reportedly in the mix as well at certain points.
The fact that John Calipari landed him over that group says something about where the Arkansas program stands right now.
On the international stage, Muurinen’s rsum carries real weight. He earned the first-ever FIBA EuroBasket Rising Star award after helping Finland to a fourth-place finish at the 2025 FIBA EuroBasket Championship.
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He scored nine points in a stunning Finnish upset of Nikola Jokic-led Serbia and put up 12 points against Germany in the semifinal round.
Completing a No. 1 Class
Muurinen isn’t listed in standard 2026 high school rankings since he competed professionally, but he’s considered a five-star prospect.
His addition gives Calipari four five-stars in this cycle along with the No. 1 rated recruiting class in the country.
He joins a group that includes Jordan Smith Jr., the No. 2 overall player in the cycle according to 247Sports, and JJ Andrews, the top-rated prospect out of Arkansas and No. 12 overall.
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Abdou Toure is a composite five-star and the No. 19 player in the cycle. On the transfer side, former Furman center Cooper Bowser and former Georgia guard Jeremiah Wilkinson round out the newcomers.
What Muurinen specifically brings is the frontcourt size Calipari needed in this class.
A 7-footer with EuroLeague experience, FIBA national team appearances and high school rsum that once made him a consensus five-star entering the cycle isn’t something programs just stumble into.
He’s a player the Hogs have prioritized for a long time, dating back to that campus visit nearly two years ago.
It’s definitely a little different. It took some time to get here but it is huge for where Arkansas is hopefully heading under Calipari.
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This article was originally published on www.si.com/college/arkansas as Finnish Big Man John Calipari Needed Just Signed with Razorbacks.
